"It comprises 10 short stories written by Iraqis, all of whom were guided by a simple yet fertile premise: What might Iraq look like a century from now?" The Atlantic review's Tor's anthology Iraq + 100 (originally published last year by Comma Press in England), which was released stateside last month—in an attempt to bring visibility to an underrepresented group of writers in America. Read The Millions' review of the "ambitious short story collection" from March.

Fun Fact: "Literature" was an Olympic event until 1948. In fact, several other events were also listed under the umbrella of "Sporting Art," as Olympic historian John MacAloonpoints out toNPR. For example, W. B. Yeats' brother, Jack Butler Yeats, won the "Mixed Painting" silver in 1924; some people even won "Medals for Making Medals!"

The office novel, by nature, is a tricky construct, if only because your average white-collar job doesn’t offer much in the way of fiction-worthy moments. That said, recent books like Then We Came to the End by Joshua Ferris demonstrate how fruitful it can be to wring drama out of the rat race. In the latest issue of Dissent, Cubed author Nikil Savaldelves into the contradictions of office fiction. FYI, Saval wrote a Year in Reading entry for us.

"Half utilitarian data visualization project, half absurdist poetic gesture:" a Brooklyn artist is working to turn all of Wikipedia into a print encyclopedia set numbering some 7,600 volumes. But the best part of the project by far is the titles for those volumes, which include such gems as "Hulk (Aqua Teen Hunger Force) — Humanitarianism in Africa."